Telling the family you want to leave the family business
Telling the family you want to leave the family business
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Hadleyiam

Original Poster:

31 posts

82 months

Thursday 26th September 2019
quotequote all
I'm turning to PH for advice on this.

I currently work for our family business and have done for the last 5 years, we are a bodyshop started by my Grandad, sadly he is no longer with us but my Dad and Uncle are now 50/50 owners, I am in my mid twenties, Dad mid 50's and uncle mid 40's.

Dad has worked here since he left school, he has pretty much built the business from the ground up and I am proud to be a part of it but I cannot stand the animosity between him and uncle anymore, my Uncle has never pulled his weight and leaves everything to do with the business to me and my dad, he turns up, repairs cars, organises his life outside work and collects his paycheck. Which annoys Dad which then gets took out on me. Dad is thinking of retiring in the next 4/5 years which means I will then be draggin my Uncle along, I want to get out now before it's too late.

I work in the office side of things with a bit of shop floor work in between, I am the only one who knows how to use the online accounting software (invoices/expenses etc).

It has gotten so bad my mental health is really bad, I have spoke to my other half about this and she is telling me to just get out, but I feel like I would be letting everyone down and putting a lot more weight back onto my dads shoulders which I took off when I joined.

I am terrified about talking to my Dad about this, I know he's my Dad and he should support me in whatever I choose but I know what will happen he will get pissed off and shrug his shoulders.

I have a side line at the minute which is doing ok and with more time spent on it I know it can be profitable even though I know it isn't a guaranteed wage each week that is why I am looking to drop down to a part time job, so I can still cover bills and focus on my sideline.

6 months ago I applied for jobs and had 2 job offers but was to scared to talk to my Dad about it, any advice? Sorry for rambling.

speedyman

1,609 posts

257 months

Thursday 26th September 2019
quotequote all
It's your life not your dad's, man up and just tell him if you want out. Sounds like nobody in the business gives a st so why should you.

Prohibiting

1,874 posts

141 months

Thursday 26th September 2019
quotequote all
Been in your position and got out.

Some may know this already (posted this before), but I used to be a farmer for 7 years on the successful family farm. It was my Grandads, then my Dads who is still there, and I worked there after Uni. For the last year of those 7, my Dad sensed I had lost enthusiasm and interest, which I had and I had thought about leaving for a long time. I had mentioned this to my partner and friends for a long time too and it was really bothering me.

Working alongside family is difficult because emotions always run higher and arguments are much more common. As my Dad sensed I had lost a lot of interest and wasn't myself, I told him during an argument that I was going to look for other jobs. He was surprised and obviously didn't think I meant it, but I did. The next day I told him I had applied to some and I'd say it took about 2-weeks for this to properly sink in that 1) I was serious, and 2) for my Dad to realise I was serious. It was very painful, lots of emotions, talks with family etc but I explained that I didn't want to be a farmer for the rest of my life, stuck in the same place and in the same house. I assume this is the same for you; you do not want to be working in a small bodyshop for the rest of your life. I wanted my own career path and to do my own thing. I think it took me about 3-months to find a new place of work.

2 years on since I left, I can honestly say our relationship has been the best its ever been. I have strong admiration for these 'Father and Son's' businesses because I know how hard family working relationships can be. Yes it'll be very tough when the news surfaces, but it is your life and your Dad, Grandad and family will understand over time. I visit my family still, and they visit me. We're all fine about it and there's no hard feelings. As for the farms future, plan A was for me to continue farming it, but obviously since I left this is no longer an option. My Dad I'd say is semi-retired and has employed a farm worker to replace me and is happy to keep it going for now, but who knows what will happen to it in the next 10 years. That is not my decision though.


Edited by Prohibiting on Thursday 26th September 20:30

KAgantua

5,099 posts

154 months

Thursday 26th September 2019
quotequote all
Had a similar thing - my brother was lined up to take over the family business in New York, quite a few years ago now. Father was ill and in hospital (Due to a hostile takeover from a rival company). I took care of negotiations with them and managed to get both their representatives out of the picture.

While this was happening, my brother died unexpectedly in a motor incident at a toll booth.
I moved to Italy for a short while until my wife died and I returned to New York.

We managed to smooth things over when my father came out of hospital, and I enacted a business plan to re-align the organisation within five years. This never came to fruition and my father sadly died five years after that.
Eventually, I managed to settle all family affairs around the time of my nephews baptism, which was a very special time for us.

Crazy situation, looking back, just when you think you are out, you are pulled back in.

bristolracer

5,884 posts

172 months

Friday 27th September 2019
quotequote all
KAgantua said:
Had a similar thing - my brother was lined up to take over the family business in New York, quite a few years ago now. Father was ill and in hospital (Due to a hostile takeover from a rival company). I took care of negotiations with them and managed to get both their representatives out of the picture.

While this was happening, my brother died unexpectedly in a motor incident at a toll booth.
I moved to Italy for a short while until my wife died and I returned to New York.

We managed to smooth things over when my father came out of hospital, and I enacted a business plan to re-align the organisation within five years. This never came to fruition and my father sadly died five years after that.
Eventually, I managed to settle all family affairs around the time of my nephews baptism, which was a very special time for us.

Crazy situation, looking back, just when you think you are out, you are pulled back in.
clap
Very clever

megaphone

11,474 posts

274 months

Friday 27th September 2019
quotequote all
Could you mange the accounts etc part time? Maybe this would be a option in the short term.

Disastrous

10,202 posts

240 months

Friday 27th September 2019
quotequote all
KAgantua said:
Had a similar thing - my brother was lined up to take over the family business in New York, quite a few years ago now. Father was ill and in hospital (Due to a hostile takeover from a rival company). I took care of negotiations with them and managed to get both their representatives out of the picture.

While this was happening, my brother died unexpectedly in a motor incident at a toll booth.
I moved to Italy for a short while until my wife died and I returned to New York.

We managed to smooth things over when my father came out of hospital, and I enacted a business plan to re-align the organisation within five years. This never came to fruition and my father sadly died five years after that.
Eventually, I managed to settle all family affairs around the time of my nephews baptism, which was a very special time for us.

Crazy situation, looking back, just when you think you are out, you are pulled back in.
Excellent! Read with mounting incredulity until the final few lines - well played hehe

vx220

2,720 posts

257 months

Friday 27th September 2019
quotequote all
???

Chainsaw Rebuild

2,117 posts

125 months

Friday 27th September 2019
quotequote all
You could look at this another way; could you and your Dad buy your uncle out?

Then you can be the admin side and your Dad the bodywork side. Then one day in the distant future when your Dad wants to retire you buy him out and employ a replacement.

GT03ROB

13,988 posts

244 months

Saturday 28th September 2019
quotequote all
vx220 said:
???
Corleone Inc.

inabox

293 posts

214 months

Saturday 28th September 2019
quotequote all
Reading the OP, it seems to me that the root cause of the problem isn't the work or the father/son relationship; it's the Uncle. Maybe have a sit down with your dad, tell him how unhappy you are and see if you can find a solution to the uncle issue?

Prohibiting

1,874 posts

141 months

Saturday 28th September 2019
quotequote all
OP hasn't been back to read the replies. Disappointing...

springfan62

910 posts

99 months

Saturday 28th September 2019
quotequote all
As has been pointed out the real issue here is the Uncle and if its a 50/50 ownership he's not going to go easily.

The ownership is in stalemate and resolving it if the Uncle isn't interested in going is going to be very messy.

Never have 50/50 ownership without a shareholders agreement.


You need to flag the whole situation with your dad and have a serious discussion.


Sir Bagalot

6,879 posts

204 months

Tuesday 1st October 2019
quotequote all
Hadleyiam said:
any advice?
Do you enjoy what you do if the Uncle was removed? If so then work on buying him out.

If not then you need to have an honest chat with your Dad. Remember, you're working for the next 40 years.

When I left school my Dad had a quite successful business, and I was the only Son. I simply had no interest so I moved onto form my own career

elanfan

5,527 posts

250 months

Thursday 3rd October 2019
quotequote all
Think you and your dad need to dissolve/disband the company and set up as just the two of you. He will be happier and so will you. In 5 years the company will likely be yours and you can employ who you like.

markcoznottz

7,155 posts

247 months

Thursday 3rd October 2019
quotequote all
Disastrous said:
KAgantua said:
Had a similar thing - my brother was lined up to take over the family business in New York, quite a few years ago now. Father was ill and in hospital (Due to a hostile takeover from a rival company). I took care of negotiations with them and managed to get both their representatives out of the picture.

While this was happening, my brother died unexpectedly in a motor incident at a toll booth.
I moved to Italy for a short while until my wife died and I returned to New York.

We managed to smooth things over when my father came out of hospital, and I enacted a business plan to re-align the organisation within five years. This never came to fruition and my father sadly died five years after that.
Eventually, I managed to settle all family affairs around the time of my nephews baptism, which was a very special time for us.

Crazy situation, looking back, just when you think you are out, you are pulled back in.
Excellent! Read with mounting incredulity until the final few lines - well played hehe
I can't imagine that being said without the bottom lip sticking out now.

TwigtheWonderkid

47,955 posts

173 months

Friday 4th October 2019
quotequote all
Disastrous said:
KAgantua said:
Had a similar thing - my brother was lined up to take over the family business in New York, quite a few years ago now. Father was ill and in hospital (Due to a hostile takeover from a rival company). I took care of negotiations with them and managed to get both their representatives out of the picture.

While this was happening, my brother died unexpectedly in a motor incident at a toll booth.
I moved to Italy for a short while until my wife died and I returned to New York.

We managed to smooth things over when my father came out of hospital, and I enacted a business plan to re-align the organisation within five years. This never came to fruition and my father sadly died five years after that.
Eventually, I managed to settle all family affairs around the time of my nephews baptism, which was a very special time for us.

Crazy situation, looking back, just when you think you are out, you are pulled back in.
Excellent! Read with mounting incredulity until the final few lines - well played hehe
I got it at the toll booth, but only because it's a standing joke in our house between me and the wife. If either one of us looks miserable and the other says "is everything ok?" the miserable one will always reply "they shot Sonny on the causeway". Don't ask why, long story going back to the 70s when we were stupid teenagers.

Anyway, still very funny....well played.


Edited by TwigtheWonderkid on Friday 4th October 16:00